| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Signed-off-by: Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>
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With the advent of Podman 2.0.0 we crossed the magical barrier of go
modules. While we were able to continue importing all packages inside
of the project, the project could not be vendored anymore from the
outside.
Move the go module to new major version and change all imports to
`github.com/containers/libpod/v2`. The renaming of the imports
was done via `gomove` [1].
[1] https://github.com/KSubedi/gomove
Signed-off-by: Valentin Rothberg <rothberg@redhat.com>
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New functionality in hack/man-page-checker: start cross-
referencing the man page 'Synopsis' line against the
output of 'podman foo --help'. This is part 1, flag/option
consistency. Part 2 (arg consistency) is too big and will
have to wait for later.
flag/option consistency means: if 'podman foo --help'
includes the string '[flags]' in the Usage message,
make sure the man page includes '[*options*]' in its
Synopsis line, and vice-versa. This found several
inconsistencies, which I've fixed.
While doing this I realized that Cobra automatically
includes a 'Flags:' subsection in its --help output
for all subcommands that have defined flags. This
is great - it lets us cross-check against the
usage synopsis, and make sure that '[flags]' is
present or absent as needed, without fear of
human screwups. If a flag-less subcommand ever
gets extended with flags, but the developer forgets
to add '[flags]' and remove DisableFlagsInUseLine,
we now have a test that will catch that. (This,
too, caught two instances which I fixed).
I don't actually know if the new man-page-checker
functionality will work in CI: I vaguely recall that
it might run before 'make podman' does; and also
vaguely recall that some steps were taken to remedy
that.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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...plus a few others. And fixes to actual parsing.
If a command's usage message includes '...' in the
argument list, assume it can take unlimited arguments.
Nothing we can check.
For all others, though, the ALL-CAPS part on the
right-hand side of the usage message will define
an upper bound on the number of arguments accepted
by the command. So in our 'podman --help' test,
generate N+1 args and run that command. We expect
a 125 exit status and a suitably helpful error message.
Not all podman commands or subcommands were checking,
so I fixed that. And, fixed some broken usage messages
(all-caps FLAGS, and '[flags]' at the end of 'ARGS').
Add new checks to the help test to prevent those in
the future.
Plus a little refactoring/cleanup where necessary.
Signed-off-by: Ed Santiago <santiago@redhat.com>
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add unshare command
add cp and init to container sub-command
allow mount to run as rootless
Signed-off-by: Brent Baude <bbaude@redhat.com>
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